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Print Price: $136.50

Format:
Hardback
352 pp.
tables, 156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199694372

Publication date:
August 2012

Imprint: OUP UK


Modality, Subjectivity, and Semantic Change

A Cross-Linguistic Perspective

Heiko Narrog

This book is a cross-linguistic exploration of semantic and functional change in modal markers. Its approach is broadly functional typological but makes frequent reference to work in formal semantics by scholars such as Angelika Kratzer and Paul Portner. The author starts by considering what modality is and how it relates to and differs from subjectivity. He argues that modality cannot be defined in terms of subjectivity: both concepts are independent of each other, the first exhibiting different degrees of subjectivity, and the second being operative in a much wider range of grammatical and lexical categories.

Subjectivity, he suggests, should not be defined solely in terms of performativity, evidentiality, or construal, but rather from the interplay of multiple semantic and pragmatic factors. He then presents a two-dimensional model for the descriptive representation of modality, based on the notion that among the many aspects of modal meaning, volitivity and speech-act-orientation versus event-orientation are two of its most salient parameters. He shows that it is especially the dimension of speech-act orientation versus event-orientation, parallel to category climbing in syntax, that is operative in diachronic change. Numerous examples of diachronic change within modality and between modality and other categories are then examined with respect to their directionality. With a focus on Japanese and to a lesser extent Chinese the book is a countercheck to hypotheses built on the Indo-European languages. It also contains numerous illustrations from other languages.

Readership : Typologists, semanticists, and those interested in language change, from graduate level upwards, as well as logicians, psychologists, and philosophers interested in subjectivity and subjectification.

1. Introduction
2. Modality and Subjectivity
3. Modality and Semantic Change
4. Illustrating the Model - some case studies
5. Cross-linguistic Patterns of Polysemy and Change Within Modality and Mood
6. Shifts Between Types of Modality in Traditional Terms
7. Into (and out of) Modality
8. Conclusions
Appendix
References

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Heiko Narrog is Associate Professor of Linguistics at Tohoku University. His publications include Modality in Japanese (Benjamins 2009); and, with Bernd Heine, The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis (OUP 2010) and The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization (OUP 2011).

Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin
Degrammaticalization - Dr. Muriel Norde
Modality - Paul Portner

Special Features

  • Up-to-date, critical, innovative, and ambitious.
  • Bridges the divide between functional and formal approaches.
  • Includes an extensive literature review.